dual pico projectors that can project both a full-size display as well as a virtual keyboard

wireless charging

a standard mini USB connector

a 3.5mm audio jack

enough processing power to render 3-D spacescapes in real time or display YouTube videos at full resolution.

Because there are two pico projectors, May imagines that one could be used to display a keyboard while the other displays a larger screen. Or, you could place the phone on your desk and have one projector display the left half of an ergonomic split keyboard, while the other projector displays the right half.

Based on the icons May’s painted into his impressive video, it’s running some version of Windows and the browser is Firefox, of course.

The trouble is that current pico projectors fall short in both brightness and clarity: You need to use them in a darkened room, like the one May’s rendering takes place in. Virtual keyboards of the type shown in the video are difficult if not impossible to use. And if netbook processors like the Intel Atom series can barely handle Windows, just imagine how sluggish it will be running on an ARM-based cellphone CPU.

One thing’s for sure: The open-source browser community is going to love this phone.

Those of us in the reality-based community, however, are shaking our heads in disbelief.